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Showing posts with label Asia. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Asia. Show all posts

8.14.2013

wanderlust wednesday: sri lanka


Up until 2012,  the north and east parts of Sri Lanka were under the occupation of the Tamil Tigers, and off-limits to tourists. Traveling off the beaten path was ill-advised and virtually impossible because of tedious military check points. Photo

But the good news is that the country is  now free of the Tamil Tigers, and  tourism is being steadily encouraged.Photo
For now, the north and east coasts are undeveloped and their natural beauty unspoiled. If you go, it is not uncommon to find yourself the only tourist around, and the only person sitting on stretches of pristine beaches.  
All this underdeveloped and rugged  beauty means that it is probably not suitable yet for travelers wanting 5 star luxury resorts and an easy vacation...for the rest of us, it means perfection! Photo

1.03.2012

Wanderlust Wednesday: Luang Prabang, Laos

Being in Luang Prabang felt like a dream. Each morning we would wander the old streets of Luang Prabang, visiting monasteries and buddhist temples, eating nutella on baguettes.
In the afternoons, we would linger around the old plantation homes- turned restaurants, drinking coffee and watching Laotian women walk by with baskets balanced on their shoulders. 
We would end an absolutely perfect day by walking from stall to stall in the largest night market i've ever seen. 
Everyday in Luang Prabang was a perfect blend of decadent and aimless wandering, wonderful food, friendly people, and unforgettable scenery. 

 Located in Northern Laos, Luang Prabang is nestled between huge forested limestone mountains and sits right at the point where the Nam River meets the Mekong. 
Luang Prabang has an ethereal, dreamlike quality, which is fitting for a town which has more monks than tourists. Originating as far back as 698 A.D., LP houses hundreds of temples and monasteries, lending the town its peaceful vibe. 
Every morning, hundreds of monks from the various monasteries and temples set out to collect alms, leaving the narrow streets awash in bright orange robes and shaved heads.   During the 17th century, France annexed Laos, forever intertwining Laos and French foods. You can still see the French influence in Luang Prabang, from the crumbling colonial villas to the stalls selling nutella and baguettes. 
In 1995, LP was placed on UNESCO's World Heritage list, and the crumbling teak houses and colonial mansions were painstakingly restored. 
The city is now known as the most charming destination in Southeast Asia and is becoming discovered by wealthier travelers since flights became available between Vientiane (the capital of Laos) and LP. 
But, Luang Prabang is not for the faint of heart.
 It took about ten years off of my life to get to this hidden mountain city. 
From Thailand, you must go all the way north to Chaing Rai (where we accidentally slept in a brothel, but that's another story). From Chaing Rai, you hire a tuk-tuk to take you to the Mekong River bed, where a long/skinny boat transports you and 50 people (way over capacity) to the other side which is Laos. 
From the river border town (you are in Laos now) you must get a visa/pull out around 50$ for about two weeks in Lao. After the customs ordeal, you find a bus, and these buses are not first class. It is an overnight bus ride into Luang Prabang, which is entirely on switchbacks, and no one is immune from motion sickness and absolutely no one sleeps. I would never recommend attempting to bus into LP during the rainy season, the roads would be terrifyingly sketchy. It would be an understatement to say that the transportation system in Luang Prabang is bad! 
On the way out of the city, I had to close my eyes for most of the journey because it was too frightening to look out the windows (I also had to play music as loud as possible to drown out the sounds of vomiting).  
It takes over 7 hours to get into or out of Luang Prabang, but the journey is well worth it (as long as you fly)!

12.29.2011

Here's to 2012

It's been a crazy busy year,
At the beginning of 2011 we left our jobs, friends, and Seattle for Southeast Asia...traveling through Thailand, Cambodia, Malaysia, Indonesia, Singapore, Laos, and Korea. 

We didn't expect to fall in love with Asia so much, but we still miss the taste of phad thai and laksa, we miss heading out of the door and being affronted by hot sticky air, we miss the smell of street cart food around every corner, we miss the craziness that is asia, the tuk-tuk's and the mopeds, we miss the grungy hostels, and the gaggle of children we befriended in Cambodia, we miss wandering from city to city with no plans, and most of all we miss the freedom of travel.

But life has to go on and with visas expiring and passports full, we had to return back to the states. We spent a few months flopping between Seattle and Spokane, restored a "vintage" motor-home, and eventually settled in Coeur d'Alene, Idaho, a little resort town we never imagined we'd live in and that we've grown to actually like (maybe love).  

In 2011, we've struggled to find jobs, to figure out plans, to figure out how to live in Idaho...2011 also brought us closer and an engagement...so here's to 2012, a year that will be full of wedding planning, hopefully more adventures, more clarity, and definitely another round of resolutions to break keep!



8.10.2011

Dragon Fruit Salad


It's been such a long time since we were in Asia or even eaten Asian food! Lately we are craving pad thai straight off of the street carts,  mangos covered in chili powder, and flavor that blows your mind. Needless to say, we are not getting it in northern Idaho. Anyways, when we were in Asia we ate a lot of dragon fruit. It is a vibrant pink on the outside and white on the inside (sometimes pink) and tastes a lot like a mellow kiwi. 
If we has an asian market in CDA I would run out and grab some dragon fruit to make this delicious "Dragon Salad" I found off of Golubka.


(Photos: Golubka)

She takes dragon fruit, jicama, avocado, and persimmons and tops it with pickled cherries and a sesame dressing- it sounds/looks absolutely delicious! You can find the recipe HERE!

8.05.2011

Photo Friday!

Thank god it's Friday-
Hope you all have a good weekend!

Kuala Lumpur from the sky

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